The wingless female cotton aphid has an ovoid body about two millimetres long in varying shades of green. The legs are yellow, as are the
antennae which are three quarters of the length of the body. The apices of the
femora,
tibia and
tarsi are black. The cylindrical black
siphunculi are wide at the base and one fifth of the body length. The winged female has a fusiform body. Its head and thorax are black, the abdomen yellowish-green with black lateral spots and the antennae are longer than those of the
apterous female. In the southern half of the US, as far north as Arkansas, sexual reproduction of the cotton aphid is not important. Females continue to produce offspring without mating so long as the weather is favourable for feeding and growth. Winged forms then migrate to secondary host species in the families
Rosaceae,
Chenopodiaceae,
Malvaceae,
Cruciferae,
Cucurbitaceae,
Solanaceae,
Compositae and others.
Parthenogenesis on these hosts allows large populations of aphids to build up quickly. The life span of a parthenogenic female is about twenty days in which time it can produce up to 85 nymphs. These mature in about twenty days at 10 °C and in about four days at 30 °C. As autumn approaches, the winged forms migrate back to the primary hosts. Here, both males and sexual females are produced, mating takes place and the females lay eggs which overwinter, ready to repeat the life cycle the following year. Predators include
midges,
lacewings,
syrphid fly larvae,
anthocorid bugs and
ladybirds (ladybeetles). Several members of the
Aphidiinae and
Aphelinidae wasp families are
parasitoids of aphids. One which shows promise as a biocontrol agent is
Aphelinus asychis. ==Host plants==